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I'm excited. Adding these 4 titles will more than double my current single issue pull list (I usually trade wait on all but creator-owned stuff or other stuff I want to support not just read, but these I want to support).

Just started re-reading Sandman this week... I'm gonna try all books, but what really interest me is Books of Magic and the Dreaming. This is good news, DC is really trying to expand it's audience, first they announce with Young Animal, The Wild Storm, Ink, Zoom. The only not so good news, is that Gaiman is not gonna be writing any title, but just the fact that he will be helping guide the ship already gime confidence.

Yep. This is pretty much a standard-issue "Shut up and take my money" situation right here!

Though much is taken, much abides; and though
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are,
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.

Sandman is my all time favourite comic book series so this is very exciting. I would, however, have liked to see more work from Gaiman himself. I'll check out the special for sure but I'd imagine I will only check the different series out in trade, depending on reviews.

Still, this is big news for Vertigo and something definitely to look forward to.

I really enjoyed the Dreaming anthology and Mike Carey's Lucifer when they initially spun out of Sandman after its run ended, and I enjoyed the early Books of Magic series as well, so I will definitely be giving all four series a chance.

I just scouted my local library's online catalog for books by the four authors and have requested a few to sample their stuff over the next few weeks as well.

Yes! Yes, indeed! One of my favorite series from the 1990s—and I do mean the ongoing. I loved the mini-series, but the ongoing is what really defined Tim Hunter for me. And, of course, we got Molly too. Hope she returns...

Yes! Yes, indeed! One of my favorite series from the 1990s—and I do mean the ongoing. I loved the mini-series, but the ongoing is what really defined Tim Hunter for me. And, of course, we got Molly too. Hope she returns...

It's not exactly going to be the Tim hunter you remember...from the interview with Gaiman in the EW article...

Q: Sandman is the big name here, but this imprint will also involve Books of Magic. What are you looking forward to about revisiting Timothy Hunter and his universe?

NG: Mostly what I’m looking forward to is going to that idea and starting it again in 2018. Books of Magic was an idea I came up with and did 30 years ago and loved and had an enormous amount of fun with. It was pre-Harry Potter, and the idea of a bespectacled, tousled 12-year-old boy with an owl learning magic was this sort of weird new thing we were trying to figure out as it went along. I love the idea of starting that again now, because now you’re in a universe in which everybody and their brother knows how that kind of story ought to go. Now we’re going to go back and look at ways it can go, both lighter and darker (he said, picking his words with care), than the original. With that one, we’re taking this comic book approach that reminds me a little bit of what DC did when they came up with the concept of Earth One. They took the Flash, and you created the Barry Allen Flash and let the Jay Garrick Flash be the Flash of Earth Two. It’s a new Tim Hunter for a new time, and the old Tim Hunter may well have existed, and that may actually have ramifications for us a little bit down the line.

Well, "everything old is new again" and all that... but in this case, I definitely won't be the one to complain.

I'm really curious to see what Gaiman has in mind for his all-new Books of Magic. While it's true that a lot of comics featuring the adventures of Tim Hunter were published after the original BoM miniseries, it was kind of a shame that those four issues plus The Children's Crusade were the only contributions by Neil to the character.

Also, after his two issues on Suicide Squad and the very intriguing first issue of Motherlands, I'd say Si Spurrier has come to DC to stay for a while-- and I approve.

It's not exactly going to be the Tim hunter you remember...from the interview with Gaiman in the EW article...

I know it won't be exactly the same. I hope there's enough similarity that it will still feel like Tim. Nothing will take away from John Ney Rieber and Peter Gross's take on the character, which I loved; but I have no problem with different takes on a favorite character. Or (as one example) I'd have stopped reading Superman in 1986...